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(c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Wendy Ward Hoffer Director of Education, PEBC A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars

Think about it…

When you hear students talking with one another, what sorts of things do they say?

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Typical Student-to-Student Talk

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Think about it…

When you talk with students, what kinds of things do you say?

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Typical Teacher-to-Student Talk

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Focus Questions:

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

What is math discourse?

Why discourse?

Discourse… • engages learners. • promotes understanding. • develops 21 st century skills • supports language development.

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Discourse engages learners.

“Learning and succeeding in school requires active engagement—whether students are rich or poor, black, brown, or white. The core principles that underlie engagement are applicable to all students—whether they are in urban, suburban, or rural communities.” - Melzer & Hamman, 2004 Of 171,000 students in 26 states surveyed in 2005, less than a third reported feeling excited about their classes. A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Discourse promotes understanding.

“As Socrates well understood, learning is more likely to change through dialogue and reflection than through lecture and imposition.” – Kober, 1993 A 2006 study of 30 industrialized nations ranted US high school students 25 th in math.

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Discourse develops 21

st

century skills.

“In order to get good jobs, and to be active and informed citizens in our democracy, economy, today’s students – and tomorrow’s workers – need to learn how to …work in teams and lead by influence, be agile and adaptable, communicate clearly and concisely…” – Tony Wagner, 2008 (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Discourse supports language development.

“Language development is an active, not passive process. Teachers must give students opportunities and time to talk, which means teachers must make key shifts: talk less, listen more.” – Klaus Quinlan & Nathenson-Mejia &, 2010 (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Stepping Stones To Successful Student Discourse

Community Purpose

Discourse

Accountability Facilitation Tasks Structure (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Purpose • clear academic rationale • transparent process skills goal(s)

Work is assigned because it is the next topic in the book. Learning goals for both content and process are clearly identified, and the task is engineered to support all in attaining those goals.

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Tasks

Worksheet: 6 x 75% 5 x 50% 30 x 25% 8 x 10%

• worthy • rich • open ended

If you drive 12,000 miles annually in a vehicle at 20 mpg, how much carbon dioxide will your car produce each year if one gallon of gas weighs approximately 6 pounds, 75% of its weight is in carbon, and each atom of carbon produces 3.67 times its weight in carbon dioxide?

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Structure •

specific tasks • limited time • metacognition

Work in groups to solve problems.

After students work independently, they turn and talk for two minutes about whether their answers to #1 were similar or different, and why. Then, as a group, they discuss how that paired sharing helped them to understand.

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Facilitation • open-ended questions • focus on thinking • welcome multiple perspectives

• Help us understand your thinking.

• Did anyone else think of this differently? • Does everyone have the same idea?

• What questions do you have?

• What is confusing?

• What was the big idea that helped you make sense of this?

• What are people still wondering?

(c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Community • shared norms • interdependence • supported by modeling

Students work alone, then tell each other their answers. “I disagree with Adam because I think when you multiply 4.5 by 3.67 you should get a number close to 12, since that is 4 x 3. So I think 165.15 is too big.”

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Accountability • responsibility for learning • frequent informal assessment

Students are not asked to demonstrate understanding regularly.

“So, now that you have solved these, discussed them with your partners, listened to the whole group share their thinking, take a half sheet of paper and write down what you do and don’t understand now about how to solve these problems.”

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Stepping Stones To Successful Student Discourse

Community Purpose Tasks

Discourse

Accountability Structure Facilitation (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Small Group Discourse Structures

• Think-Pair – Share • Back to Back • Carousel Critique • Give One – Get One • Reciprocal Teaching • Notice and Wonder

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Small Group Discourse Structures

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

Large Group Discourse Structures

• Solution Discussion • Peer Critique • Socratic Seminar • Review Games in Teams • Sharing understandings

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

How will you begin?

What questions do you have?

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

References • Daniels School of Business, University of Denver advertisement • • • • Klaus- Quinlan, Moker and Sally Nathansen- Mejia. Bridging Words And Worlds: Effective Instruction for Culturally & Linguistically Divserse Learners. (PEBC, 2010) Program for International Student Assessment, 2006 (OECD) Quate, Stevi and John McDermott. Clockwatchers: Six Steps to Motivating and Engaging Disengaged Students Across the Content Areas (Heinemann, 2010) Wagner, Tony. The Global Achievement Gap: Why Even Our Best Schools Don't

Teach the New Survival Skills Our Children Need--And What We Can Do About

It(Basic Books, 2008) For Further Reading • Boaler, Jo. What’s Math Got to Do with It? (Viking, 2008) • • Chapin, Suzanne. Classroom Discussions Using Math Talk. (Math Solutions, 2003) Hyde, Art. Understanding Middle School Math: Cool Problems to Get Students Thinking and Connecting. (Heinemann, 2009) Follow Up Questions ?

[email protected]

A recording of today’s webinar will be available at: http://www.carnegielearning.com/webinars (c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011

(c) PEBC. Hoffer, 2011